Stern Manufacturing purchased an ultrasound drilling machine with a remaining 10
ID: 2446927 • Letter: S
Question
Stern Manufacturing purchased an ultrasound drilling machine with a remaining 10-year economic life from a 70 percent-owned subsidiary for $360,000 on January 1, 20X6. Both companies use straight-line depreciation. The subsidiary recorded the following entry when it sold the machine to Stern:
Prepare the worksheet consolidation entry or entries needed to remove the effects of the intercompany sale of equipment when consolidated financial statements are prepared as of (a) December 31, 20X6, and (b) December 31, 20X7.
a. Record the entry to eliminate the gain on the equipment and to correct the asset's basis.
b. Record the entry to adjust Accumulated Depreciation.
c. Record the entry to eliminate the gain on the equipment and to correct the asset's basis.
d. Record the entry to adjust Accumulated Depreciation.
General Journal Debit Credit Cash 360,000 Accumulated Depreciation 150,000 Equipment 450,000 Gain on Sale of Equipment 60,000 Required:Prepare the worksheet consolidation entry or entries needed to remove the effects of the intercompany sale of equipment when consolidated financial statements are prepared as of (a) December 31, 20X6, and (b) December 31, 20X7.
a. Record the entry to eliminate the gain on the equipment and to correct the asset's basis.
b. Record the entry to adjust Accumulated Depreciation.
c. Record the entry to eliminate the gain on the equipment and to correct the asset's basis.
d. Record the entry to adjust Accumulated Depreciation.
Explanation / Answer
Based on your answer to Question 57, is it still reasonable to think the overall proportion defective produced by today’s process is actually the targeted 4%? Explain your reasoning.
ANSWER:
No, since 4% falls outside of this range.
Related Questions
drjack9650@gmail.com
Navigate
Integrity-first tutoring: explanations and feedback only — we do not complete graded work. Learn more.